U.S. colonial fort (1799–1814) in present-day Mount Vernon, Alabama
The Mobile River , looking northward from the site of Fort Stoddert.
Fort Stoddert , also known as Fort Stoddard ,[ 1] was a stockade fort in the U.S. Mississippi Territory , in what is today Alabama . It was located on a bluff of the Mobile River , near modern Mount Vernon , close to the confluence of the Tombigbee and Alabama Rivers . This location was just north of what was then the international boundary line between the new United States and Spanish-held West Florida . As a border fort, Fort Stoddert served as the southwestern terminus of the Federal Road which ran through Creek lands to Fort Wilkinson in Georgia . The fort, built in 1799, was named for Benjamin Stoddert , the secretary to the Continental Board of War during the American Revolution and Secretary of the Navy during the Quasi War .[ 2] Fort Stoddert was built by the United States to keep the peace by preventing its own settlers in the Tombigbee District from attacking the Spanish in the Mobile District .[ 3] It also served as a port of entry and was the site of a Court of Admiralty .[ 4] While under the command of Captain Edmund P. Gaines , Aaron Burr was held as a prisoner at the fort after his arrest at McIntosh in 1807 for treason against the United States . In July 1813, General Ferdinand Claiborne brought the Mississippi Militia to Fort Stoddert as part of the Creek War .[ 5] The 3rd Infantry Regiment was commanded by General Thomas Flournoy to Fort Stoddert following the Fort Mims massacre .[ 6] The site declined rapidly in importance after the capture of Mobile by the United States in 1813 and the establishment of the Mount Vernon Arsenal in 1828.[ 3]
A post office operated under the name Fort Stoddart from 1804 to 1829.[ 7]
The first newspaper in Alabama, The Mobile Centinel , was published weekly at Fort Stoddert from 1811 to 1813.[ 8]
References
^ "Old Fort Stoddard Mount Vernon Landing" . Geographic Names Information System . United States Geological Survey , United States Department of the Interior .
^ Barlow Genealogy. "Old Federal Road: Georgia to Alabama" . Retrieved May 4, 2005
^ a b Southerland, Henry deLeon; Brown, Jerry Elijah (1989). The Federal Road through Georgia, the Creek Nation, and Alabama, 1806–1836 . Tuscaloosa, Alabama: University of Alabama Press. pp. 33– 35. ISBN 0-8173-0443-6 .
^ "Fort Stoddert" . The Creek War and the War of 1812 . Retrieved 10 February 2021 .
^ Harris, W. Stuart (1977). Dead Towns of Alabama . Tuscaloosa, Alabama: University of Alabama Press. p. 51. ISBN 0-8173-1125-4 .
^ Weir, III, Howard (2016). A Paradise of Blood: The Creek War of 1813–14 . Yardley, Pennsylvania: Westholme. p. 196. ISBN 1-59416-270-0 .
^ "Mobile County" . Jim Forte Postal History. Retrieved 28 July 2020 .
^ "On this day in Alabama history: State's first newspaper was published" . Alabama News Center . 11 May 2018. Retrieved 29 July 2020 .